The offer hung in the air.
Damian stood up without a word, his expression completely blank.
He turned and started walking toward the door.
"Where do you think youâre going?"
Ashfordâs voice carried surprised irritation.
"Weâre not finished with this conversation. Sit back down."
Damian kept walking, not even glancing back.
"There is always a price to be paid for knowledge, boy. A truly smart person understands when to submit and bow their head to superior power. The Noble families have not even taken you seriously as a threat yet, or you and your family would already be dead.
You think beating a few student heirs in sanctioned matches means anything? Youâre an ant they havenât bothered to step on yet.
Accepting subordinate status under my familyâs protection is the only way you survive whatâs coming when they decide youâve become annoying enough to deal with properly."
Damianâs footsteps stopped.
He stood there with his back to Ashford for a long moment, his long crimson hair obscuring his face.
Then he glanced back over his shoulder, just a small turn of his head, just enough to look Ashford directly in the eyes.
"Did you really think I have no backing? That Iâve been operating completely unprotected this entire time?"
His voice was soft, almost curious.
"Do you not know who my master is, Professor Ashford?"
For the first time, Ashfordâs expression flickered with something other than bored superiority.
A pause and a moment of uncertainty.
"Headmaster Kaiser. Yes, Iâm aware of that relationship. And yes, that status provides you with a certain degree of protection from direct action. But even the Headmasterâs protection has limits, especially when it comes to your family.
What about them, Damian? Your parents, your sister, your extended relatives. They donât have the Headmaster watching over them. Theyâre completely vulnerable to pressure or elimination if you continue being a problem."
Damian turned around fully now, and something about his expression made even Ashford lean back slightly.
A smile... Soft and almost gentle. Completely terrifying in its implications.
"...Did you really think I care about the Valcor family? Professor, Iâm an orphan who was adopted into that household. I never developed any genuine attachment to them.
Honestly, they donât even know the real me. Weâve barely spoken beyond surface-level pleasantries since I arrived."
He walked closer to Ashfordâs desk, his movements casual but somehow threatening.
"Go ahead and check my behavioral records from before the Norrington City incident. Did anyone ever wonder why thereâs such a dramatic contrast in how I act now compared to how I acted then?
Thatâs because I never made my real intentions or personality known before coming to the Academy. I wore a mask for years. The Valcors think they adopted a quiet, grateful boy. They have absolutely no idea who I actually am."
Damianâs smile widened.
"So please, tell the Noble families theyâre welcome to kill the Valcor family if they think that will pressure me into submission.
Iâll attend the funeral, drop a few appropriate tears, give a moving speech about family being taken too soon. But I myself will remain perfectly safe under the Headmasterâs protection, and my actual operations wonât be affected in the slightest.
Theyâre not my real family. Theyâre just people whose name I happen to carry."
Complete silence filled the office.
Ashford stared at him with something approaching horror mixed with disbelief.
Nathan looked shocked, his anger forgotten in the face of this revelation.
Damian turned and walked toward the door again.
"Thank you for your time, Professor Ashford. This conversation has been very educational about how the favor system works among Nobles. Iâll remember that for future reference."
He opened the door and walked out without looking back.
****
Outside in the hallway, several students whoâd been lingering near Ashfordâs door quickly scattered.
Theyâd been listening. Of course theyâd been listening. A meeting between a controversial first-year and an Imperial family professor was too interesting to ignore.
And theyâd heard everything.
Damian didnât care. Let them spread what theyâd heard and let the rumors grow.
Heâd just deliberately painted himself as someone completely ruthless, willing to sacrifice even his adopted family without hesitation.
It was a lie, of course.
Deep inside, he knew it was a lie.
But he couldnât let his enemies know about his real weaknesses. Couldnât let them understand what he actually cared about beyond his carefully constructed image.
The Valcor family wasnât weak either, which made the lie more plausible. His adoptive parents were both A rank awakeners when he was adopted, and he strongly suspected theyâd advanced to S rank by now based on various indicators.
S rank awakeners werenât easy targets. There werenât many people in the Federation who could threaten them directly.
And honestly, Damian had no idea what his adoptive parents actually did for their livelihoods.
Theyâd never discussed it in detail. Maybe when he went home for his birthday in a few days, he could finally ask those questions.
But right now, maintaining the image of someone without conventional weaknesses was more important than truth.
"Damian, wait!"
Nathanâs voice called from behind him.
Damian stopped and turned as the professor caught up, looking embarrassed and angry and something else that might have been impressed.
"Iâm so sorry. I thought Ashford would honor the debt properly. I didnât expect him to be so blatant about demanding submission. That was humiliating and I feel terrible for wasting your time with this."
"Itâs not your fault, Professor Nathan. You tried to help me, and I appreciate that regardless of the outcome.
Ashfordâs behavior tells me everything I need to know about how Nobles view favors and debts."
Nathan reached into his coat and pulled out a thick, worn notebook.
"Take this. Itâs my entire lifeâs study on theoretical foundations for skills and weapon arts.
Every concept Iâve developed, every framework Iâve discovered and every principle Iâve tested over twenty years of research. Itâs not as comprehensive as what Ashford could teach you, but itâs something."
His voice was rough with emotion.
"I canât give you formal instruction because the families would crush me for it. But this notebook is just an old professor giving some notes to a student. Nobody can prove anything or punish me for that."
Damian took the notebook carefully, feeling the weight of two decades of accumulated knowledge in his hands.
"Thank you, Professor. This means more to me than you probably realize. Iâll study it carefully and make sure your research isnât wasted."
"I know you will. Youâre the kind of student I always wished Iâd had the courage to be."
Nathan hesitated, then spoke more quietly.
"In the future, when youâve built what youâre building, when youâve changed what youâre trying to change, maybe Iâll find the courage to actually join you instead of just helping from the shadows. Maybe Iâll finally become the person I used to be before the system broke me."
Damian looked at him for a long moment, seeing the conflict and hope and self-loathing all mixed together in the professorâs expression.
"Youâre welcome to join whenever youâre ready, Professor. The door is always open for people who genuinely want to build something better.
No pressure and no judgment for waiting until youâre certain. Just know that youâll always have a place if you decide to take that step."
Nathan nodded, unable to speak around the emotion in his throat.
Damian turned and walked away, his mood cold despite the successful acquisition of Nathanâs research.
The interaction with Ashford had reminded him of everything wrong with the current system.
The casual dismissal and the assumption of superiority. The complete lack of respect for anything beyond Noble status and power.